Friday, August 31, 2012

it's playtime

Welcome to another week of  It's Playtime.   

Playful Picks

Simple, yet irresistible - have a look at this paper towel roll tunnel from Healthy Mama Info:




Meet my Partners in play:


What have you been playing this week?

Monday, August 27, 2012

Primary school bans handstands. What next?

Photo Credit

And in a world gone completely mad, one Sydney school made the decision this week to ban handstands, cartwheels and somersaults unless "under the supervision of a trained gymnastics teacher and with correct equipment.''



But wait, that's not all.  Last week it was revealed that a Melbourne Primary School, had placed a ban on balls in the playground before and after school.

I spent my primary school years covered in mechurochrome from scrapes received on our asphalt playground, but that didn't worry me - or my parents - in the slightest.  In fact, we kids at Balgowlah Heights Primary School in the 1970's and 1980's wore our mechurochrome-covered cuts and scrapes with great pride and continued our handstand games of 'hey presto' without missing a beat.

A sprained ankle or a banged up knee seems a small price to pay for the sense of pride and accomplishment you get when you finally master a cartwheel.  

Not to mention the fact that you are moving your body, gaining confidence, building self-esteem, developing resilience, working on balance, strengthening and stretching muscles, developing co-ordination, taking risks and delighting in shared play experiences.

Increasing pressure from the cotton-wool generation of parents is backing schools into a corner and leading them to make decisions that would have seemed ludicrous a generation ago.  At the same time, here we are all wringing our hands and shaking our heads over the rise of childhood obesity in Australia.

Children can get hurt any time, anywhere - as can we.  That's life.  My youngest son broke his risk running into a wall at his school.  Do we ban running?  Walls?

What do you think?  Are schools being smart to protect themselves?  Are parents over-reacting?  How can we, as parents and teachers, protect our children's right to free, unstructured outdoor play?






And School Begins...

It is that season again when most school systems begin a new academic year.  We started classes at the university last Monday, but most of the public school districts in our area begin in the next few days.  I took the opportunity last week to visit my student teaching candidates as they were helping their site teachers with classroom setup.  The old "beginning of the year" excitement was very evident in every school I visited.  I remember that excitement well as I enjoyed setting up my classroom every fall for almost 25 years.  Later this week, I will meet with my candidates and begin our semester-long course on classroom management.  To me, effectively managing a classroom is the key to everything for the year.  A teacher cannot teach successfully, or children learn successfully, without an effective classroom routine.  Research tells us that it is the attitude of the teacher that is the key factor in teaching reading, math, and other academic subjects.  My job this semester is to model for my student teachers how human development should be the foundation of that classroom management.  Our educational system is so focused on academic teaching that teachers don't receive a lot of support for meeting the needs of their students using developmental principles. Those principles are the key to understanding how students function. It is not just early childhood children who should reap the benefits of developmentally appropriate practice. Understanding the developmental stage of a 9 year-old will be a tremendous help for the teacher in a fourth grade classroom. My job is to help my group of future teachers understand those principles.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Picnic in the dirt patch


A picnic blanket, pots and pans and a great big tub of wood chips by the dirt patch to welcome little picnickers on a sunshiny day. 




They collect, they scoop, they spoon, they fill, they mix, they stir, they experiment, they talk.




 They cook up a natural feast.


 

Lay down a picnic blanket, set out some old cooking utensils next to a patch of dirt and step back.  Hours of outdoor fun and play - it's that simple.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

it's playtime




It's been a long time between drinks for Let the Children Play and It's Playtime. I plead the intrusion of life, the universe and everything for disrupting my posting schedule and thank my partners in play for allowing me to drop the ball in such a dramatic fashion.  

I've pulled up my socks, and am back on track today, and bringing you my favourite picks from last week's wealth of play experiences.

Impossible to go past an amazing 60 Nature Play Ideas for Kids from the equally amazing The Imagination Tree.  Try one, try them all and get outside with the kids and play!


Continuing on the outdoor theme - naturally - have a look at this oh so simple outdoor music play area from Play Dr Mom:



Has your post been featured?  You are welcome to grab this badge to display on your blog.

let the children play



What have your kids been playing this week?  We'd love to know.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

delightfully disgusting


The day was delightfully sunny, so what better to do than get stuck into that marvellously sensory business of making goop alfresco style.


 Mixing the cornflour and water together with little hands and curious minds:


 Is is a liquid, or is it not?  Firm under pressure, and oozy, slimy, runny goo when released.

The exploring and experimenting didn't end there.  When the outdoor kitchen is so close, how tempting is it to see what will happen when you mix goop with dirt:





and wood shavings:


and grass:


Preschool experimentation at its delightfully disgusting best!

Monday, August 20, 2012

wine racks, ramps and marble runs.


I spied a small wine rack on the side of the road during our last council clean-up and in manner of all good preschool teachers, I stopped to put it in the boot because it might come in handy one day.


Turns out, it does come in handy.  It's perfect for holding up the tubes and gutters in the block area when making those ever popular car ramps and marble runs.  







A wine rack in preschool?  Who knew?!